Our European allies need to be able to buy our fuel, or they will fall to enemy domination.
“Our European allies need to be able to buy our fuel, or they will fall to enemy domination.”
— Robert Zubrin · Allies
The World Motivation
Our European allies need to be able to buy our fuel, or they will fall to enemy domination.
“Our European allies need to be able to buy our fuel, or they will fall to enemy domination.”
— Robert Zubrin · Allies
Explore more quotes by Robert Zubrin on topics like Allies, wisdom, and life lessons.
“Our European allies need to be able to buy our fuel, or they will fall to enemy domination.”
“Despite being bailed out - in some cases repeatedly - by the public purse, the automakers have shown little public spirit.”
“I run a small company with 18 employees on its payroll.”
“The problem is that the automobile companies are not independent entities capable of pursuing their own interests. Rather, they are owned and controlled by organizations that are much more heavily invested in oil.”
“Traditional Marxism attempted to argue against free enterprise by saying that capitalism causes poverty and that, therefore, socialism is necessary. That didn't work, because it was false.”
“Can we achieve 140 mpg fuel economy? You bet. Just get the bureaucrats out of the way, and Yankee ingenuity will do the rest.”
“Iran has been one of America's greatest enemies and I'm proud that President Trump is protecting our country and our allies.”
“Good entrepreneurs can manage, but no one but an entrepreneur can entrepreneur, let alone help build and lead the world's community of leading social entrepreneurs and their top business entrepreneur allies.”
“As someone who took an oath to defend this country, I refuse to sit idle until the unimaginable occurs: Iran cheats or simply runs out the clock, and the largest state sponsor of terrorism threatens the United States and its allies with a nuclear weapon.”
“No one would argue that it's in the United States' interest to have independent knowledge of the plans and intentions of foreign countries. But we need to think about where to draw the line on these kind of operations so we're not always attacking our allies, the people we trust, the people we need to rely on, and to have them in turn rely on us.”
“When the new wave of terrorism came on the modern world, which is the late 1960s, early 1970s, I think we spent about a decade, the United States and our allies, trying to figure out how to deal with it.”